Originally Posted by
TomMartin
Photos handles the outer part as expected but creates a variety of patterns in the interior section as the zoom level changes. It's acting as I described above - certain zoom ratios are more faithful than others. Since Photos doesn't tell you what the zoom level is I can't tell which are more accurate.
When I use FastStone the behavior is similar but the patterns are different. There are clearly "sweet spots" in the zooming. Some zooms are accurate while less intense zooms are not.
The more processing a program must do, the less predictable the results. So what could simplify a program's task? We know that images can be zoomed 50% or 200% blindingly fast so those are using minimal processing. As expected, the 50% zoom produces a very strong image when viewed at full size. The same cannot be said for other zoom levels although 49% does seem to do equally well. I'm not surprised that I can't predict which "complex" zooms will be accurate but at least all the "simple" zooms look good. That's not proof, but it certainly supports my argument.
All I'm looking for is a way to avoid the unpredictable variation in the center as you move through different zoom levels. I suspect it can be done by using simple ratios but I suppose I'll need to resize the image a few dozen times to generate enough data to prove my theory.